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jmeter does not give this out of the box but it's not so hard to code up a solution. If you use the command line to execute the test then the -l flag tells jmeter where to put the results and then it's simply a matter of writing a post execution processing step that takes this file and analyses it. Eg. we use the shell script above to upload our results to a database and we query them from there using a custom presentation layer.
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Oliver LloydJun 13 '12 at 10:38

Ehm so are you searching for what exactly? I was using JProfiler and it was very efficient for me. I recorded measurement data from my app which i could analyze on the fly and afterwards as well. But i'm not sure if this is what you need. "Automatic stress test". Maybe you could run a bunch of Selenium tests while running JProfiler? Will you use commercial or do you prefer 'free' (sorry for the term) tools?